100 Hours of Astronomy Webcast Underway 48
An anonymous reader writes "As part of the International Year of Astronomy, the live video webcast Around the World in 80 Telescopes is taking place now, with fascinating live linkups with the world's leading observatories. The schedule for the webcast is available as a PDF and the recorded videos are available via the 100 hours of astronomy page"
YAY! (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Here, try watching this Bassmasters [wikipedia.org]. The current schedule at http://sports.espn.go.com/outdoors/tv/news/story?page=g_tv_desc_bass_reairs [go.com].
Reminds me of the comedian who wondered what it was like to be the show producer / editor for Bassmasters and having to watch 10 hours of tape for every 1-hour episode.... "No... no... no... wait, yes, bait the hook, no... no...
Re:ISS (Score:5, Insightful)
What were you expecting, dancing girls and a cool laser show?
Re: (Score:2)
And just to forewarn you a bit, if you go to your local amateur astronomy observatory and expect to see through a telescope what you see on the Astronomy Picture of the Day website [nasa.gov] you're going to be in for even more of a disappointment.
Real astronomy isn't like what the movies show. It's unfortunate that you can't find the wonder in seeing what's essentially a few school buses tied together traveling at ~18000
Re: (Score:2)
You typed your zipcode into online submission form?
To be fair, that tells you when it will be overhead. You may still need to break out a compass with an inclinometer to find out where to actually expect it, and that can be a bit of work I suppose.
Of course, if you can get your bearings, you can make good estimations using nothing more than your own hands [austinastro.org]. Last time I tried (it's been a few years, come to think of it), I was able to estimate alt/az to within about 3-5 degrees... Not as good as many, but good enough for most things. Not everyone seems
Re: (Score:1)
It was actually 'under 12 parsecs'
The Kessel Run is an 18 parsec route.
A parsec is equal to roughly 3.26 light years.
"The simple truth is that interstellar distances will not fit into the human imagination"...
Crap. What a way to find out my imagination is non human.
Re:Year of Astronomy... (Score:4, Informative)
150 years since the publication of OoS just doesn't seem all that interesting to me. 400 years is a much rounder number.
-- http://astronomy2009.us/ [astronomy2009.us]
Re: (Score:2)
Bah! Sorry about the character issues. Why Slashdot uses ISO-8859-1 instead of UTF-8 encoding, I have absolutely no clue. Follow the link, though, it has lots of good info.
Re:Year of Astronomy... (Score:4, Interesting)
Yeah, 150 years since OoS.
64 years since the first computer,
62 years since transistors were invented,
51 years since integrated circuits were invented,
38 years since Intel invented the 4004,
31 years since the first Apple ][s,
28 years since the first IBM PC,
25 years since the first Mac,
17 years since Bill and Lynne Jolitz released 386bsd,
And 17 years since Ken Thompson invented UTF-8.
But in the 21st Century, Slashdot still uses fricken ASCII
Re: (Score:2)
Actually, they're not using ASCII, they're using ISO-Latin-1, which, to be fair, is the default Western character set, so it's not totally unreasonable, just unfortunate for those of us who expect UTF-8 to be the default.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
If I had to choose I would still go for astronomy. I bet you that astronomy has spurred many more people into taking up an interest in science more than evolution could ever imagine. Why do you think the vast majority of all science fiction is based on space? The rallying points for science set out there for the public needs to get a hold of people
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Why do you think the vast majority of all science fiction is based on space?
Because alien chicks can have any arbitrary number of boobs.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Not to mention this is the month of Easter, when we should really be focussed on Jesus Christ who died and was resurrected nigh on two millenia ago.
But a significant percentage of the population don't believe that Jesus Christ existed (or, if he did, that the stories about him are true). Pretty much everyone accepts that both Darwin and Galileo existed and did do what it is said they did - even those who disagree with their findings/thoughts/ideas.
Re: (Score:2)
...and my wife makes another media appearance! (Score:2)
She did Mythbusters' Apollo Landing Hoax episode last January (Dr. Russet McMillan, the APOLLO lunar laser stuff at the end) and now this! She's heading up the mountain this evening to do the Apache Point segment, but I understand they're having feed issues, so hard to say if the webcast portion is going to work very well. I'll probably wait and watch post-event streams.
(she did something else television-wise this January, but we can't talk about it and don't know when it will air)
Re: (Score:1)
someone on /. has managed to find time alone with a woman?
Seriously, though, I wish my girl had doctor in front of her name...
Re: (Score:2)
Well, she found me online. For the most part, by definition, astronomers live in pretty remote areas, and the dating pool was kind of limited. She expanded her search radius on the dating site that we used and she found me!
We were married about 18 months later, and we're celebrating our 4th anniversary in 3 months.
Amongst the many cool things, she's a gamer (she beat me to L80 in WoW because she has more free time with her work schedule), a movie buff, a foodie (lots of astronomers are, you can't call Pap
Great stream - relevant, entertaining, educational (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
All those pop-up ads in the stream are really enlightening. Like the one about losing ugly belly fat that popped up while two bozos were talking about stars or some shit. The guy on the right was fat, and I'll bet he could really use the knowledge contained in that engrossing ad.
Yeah, this is stream is really driven by the desire educate people.
Space (Score:1, Informative)
The final frontier...
Flash ads distracting and annoying (Score:2)
I keep having to click the close box on these asinine ads that block the bottom 3rd of the window. Anyone else finding them distracting?
Re: (Score:1)
365 days of Astronomy Podcast (Score:3, Interesting)
Enjoying the video stream, never realised there were so many observatories doing cool stuff. Also try the excellent podcast stream, one per day for the rest of the year.
http://365daysofastronomy.org/ [365daysofastronomy.org]
(Yes I bought the tee shirt)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Off-hand, I know of five in Southern/Central New Mexico: Apache Point, National Solar Observatory at Sun Spot, Very Large Array, Magdalena Ridge, the former Liquid Mirror Telescope installation just outside of Cloudcroft. There's also New Mexico Skies east of Cloudcroft, but that's a for-profit venture with large amateur models.
In Arizona, you've got Kitt Peak, Mount Graham, Lowell Observatory (Pluto discoverer), there's at least 1 more in Southern AZ but I can't think of the name. And usually these have
And of course, they snub the scope I'm at! (Score:2)
I've worked at Gemini in the past. I've worked at UKIRT in the past. The two nights immediately preceding the event, I worked at Keck (although on the summit, not like those webcasting wimps down in Waimea). But every night of the webcast, I'm working at the UH 2.2-meter, formerly known as "THE Mauna Kea Observatory," which somehow managed to not get a slot - my boss claims there were a limited number of slots available and the bigger scopes snagged them all - and then get overlooked completely in the pr
Re: (Score:2)
Very cool! Sorry to hear your scope got sorta snubbed, my wife just did the Apache Point segment. I don't know how many discoveries they've had, but they are also the home to the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, which was recently recognized (IIRC) as being the most used source for astronomy data for publications last year. But I'm probably somewhat off on that quote, been sick recently and just don't remember.
I wish this event was given more exposure... (Score:1)
Does not work in Linux (Score:2)
The UStream.tv stuff seems broken. None if it will play with FF on Linux even with the Flash 9 player installed.
They must be worried about drm. :-( (Score:1)
I am here at Ke.....ck observatory to sh....ow you what we d.......o here.
If they enable caching watch it. I could at least start the video several minutes early. That way I could at least understand it. But then, Oh no, I could capture the cache.
I am sorry I cannot watch it. I am sure it is very interesting. This is very lame.
~The Lucifer Project~ (Score:1)
Please visit my website at your convenience...
http://www.xanga.com/Avenueoflight [xanga.com]
"ORGANIZED CHRISTIANITY"
Moon Phase? (Score:1)